Carnival Aims to Launch Miami to Cuba Cruises in 2016
Beginning
in May 2016, Carnival says its newly launched Fathom brand — a new
social impact travel brand providing purpose-oriented, social impact
experiences, will go to Cuba — pending approval from the island nation.
(Photo: AP)
by Scott Mayerowitz
The world’s largest cruise company could be heading to Cuba.
Starting
in May, Carnival Corp. plans to offer trips from Miami to the Caribbean
island nation, the company announced Tuesday. Carnival says it would
become the first American cruise company to visit Cuba since the 1960
trade embargo. The trips will be through its new brand, fathom, which
focuses on trips where passengers sail to a destination in order to
volunteer there.
“This
is an important first step for our company and the cruise industry,”
CEO Arnold Donald told The Associated Press in an email. “It begins our
efforts to shape a long sustained industry experience in Cuba.”
The
weeklong cruises will be aboard the Adonia, which carries 710
passengers. The ship is relatively small for the industry; ships sailing
under the company’s namesake line carry nearly 3,000 passengers.
Vintage American cars in Havana. (Thinkstock)
Carnival
is expecting high demand for the voyages and has priced them
accordingly. Prices start at $2,990 per person plus taxes and port fees.
A similar service-oriented trip on the same ship to the Dominican
Republic starts at $1,540 per person.
The
itinerary is still being finalized as Carnival waits for approval from
the Cuban government. The ship is expected to visit several ports and
passengers will sleep onboard each night.
Cuba
is still closed for general tourism for Americans, although as
relations thaw between the two countries visitors have fewer hurdles to
overcome. Americans can’t just vacation in Cuba but must go there as
part of an approved cultural or humanitarian trip, unless they have
family on the island.
Che Guevara T-shirts for sale in Old Havana. (Photo: Desmond Boylan/AP)
Carnival’s
license comes as part of recent approvals for six passenger vessels
from the Treasury Department. The government would not name the
companies who received these licenses or what their specific line of
business is. They could be ferries, yacht charters or cruises. Of those
six, four of them are authorized to allow passengers and crew to spend
the night aboard, even when docked in a Cuban port. Other major cruise
lines did not immediately respond to inquiries about their efforts to
sail to Cuba.
The
vessels are not allowed to stop at other countries, so don’t expect
Cuba to become one of four or five stops on a typical Caribbean cruise
anytime soon.
Carnival
isn’t the first cruise company to sail to Cuba. A handful of foreign
cruises do come to the island. In 2013, Canadian company Cuba Cruise, in
partnership with Greece’s Celestyal Cruises, launched cruises from
Jamaica to Cuba, making six ports of call including Havana and Santiago
de Cuba. Trips start at about $850.
Cuba’s legendary Hotel Nacional. (Photo: Kathy Willens/AP)
Tourism,
a $2.6 billion-plus industry, is one of the main engines that has kept
Cuba’s economy sputtering along. Last year, the country welcomed a
record 3 million visitors.
About
600,000 U.S. travelers are estimated to visit Cuba each year. Cuban
officials estimate that 1.5 million Americans would travel to the island
annually if all restrictions were removed, supplanting Canada as the
No. 1 source of tourism and potentially adding some $2 billion a year to
state coffers.
There
are many challenges ahead for the country as it opens up to U.S.
visitors. There isn’t yet enough infrastructure to handle the demand.
But major travel companies including Delta Air Lines, JetBlue Airways,
United Airlines, Hilton Worldwide and Marriott International have been
closely eyeing developments there. JetBlue, which has run charter
flights from Florida to Cuba for years, just launched a new nonstop
flight from New York. It is only open to travelers who are approved to
visit Cuba. American Airlines and Sun Country Airlines also offer
charters.
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